I know I know, she wanted to scream. But I'm a woman and I have to wait, I've been waiting and now it's too late. Is it? Oh Blessed Mother, help me! "I don't... don't think Malcolm will blame me for my father or, or listen to his mother."
"I'm afraid he has to, Angelique.
Have you forgotten Malcolm Struan is a minor too, however much he's tai-pan. His twenty-first birthday's not till May next year. Until then she can put all sorts of legal restraints on him, even annul a betrothal under English law." He was not completely sure of this but it sounded reasonable and was true under French law.
"She could put restraints on you too, perhaps take you to court," he added so sadly, "Struan's are powerful in Asia, it's almost their domain. She could have you hauled into court--you know what they say about judges, any judges, eh?
She could have you dragged before a magistrate, accuse you of being a coquette, a deceiver, just after his money or worse. She could paint a nasty picture to the judge, you in the dock and defenseless, your father a gambling, bankrupt ne'er-do-well, your uncle in Debtor's Prison, you penniless, an adventuress."
Her face became haggard. "How do you know about Uncle Michel? Who are you?"
"There are no tricks, Angelique," he said easily. "How many French citizens are in Asia? Not many, none like you, and people like to gossip.
Me, I'm Andr`e Poncin, China trader, Japan trader. You've nothing to fear from me. I want nothing but your friendship and trust and to help."
"How? I'm beyond help."
"No you're not," he said softly, watching her carefully. "You love him, don't you? You would be the best wife a man can have given the chance, wouldn't you?"
"Yes, yes of course..."
"Then press him, beguile him, persuade him, any way you can to make your betrothal public. I can guide you perhaps." Now, at last, he saw that she was really hearing him, really understanding him. Gently he delivered the coup de grace. "A wise woman, and you are wise as you are beautiful, would get married quickly. Very quickly."
Struan was reading, the oil lamp on the table beside his bed giving enough light, the door to her room ajar. His bed was comfortable and he was engrossed in the story, his silken nightshirt enhancing the color of his eyes, his face still pale and thin with none of its former strength. On the bedside table was a sleeping draft, his pipe and tobacco and matches and water laced with a little whisky: "Good for you, Malcolm," Babcott had said. "It's the best nighttime medicine you could have, taken weak.
Better than the tincture."
"Without that I'm awake all night and feel dreadful."
"It's seventeen days now since the accident, Malcolm, it's time to stop, Malcolm. Really to stop, not good to rely on medicine to sleep.
Best we stop it for good."
"I tried that before and it didn't work. I'll stop in a day or two...."
Curtains were drawn against the night, the room cozy, the ticktock of the ornate Swiss timepiece peaceful. It was almost one o'clock, and the book, The Murders in the Rue Morgue, was one that Dmitri had loaned him this morning saying: "Think you'll like it, Malc, it's what they call a detective story--Edgar Allan Poe's one of our best writers, sorry was, he died in '49, the year after the Gold Rush.
I've a collection of his books and poems if you like this one."
"Thanks, you're very kind. Good of you to drop by so often. But why so glum today, Dmitri?"' "News from home is bad. My folks... it's all bad, Malc, all mixed up, cousins, brothers, uncles on both sides.
Hell, you don't want to hear about that. Listen, I've lots of other books, a whole library in fact."
"Go on about your family, please," he had said, the pain of the day beginning. "Really, I'd like to hear."
"All right, sure. Well, when my granddaddy and his family came over from Russia, from the Crimea--did I tell you our family were Cossacks--they settled in a little place called Far Hills in New Jersey, farmed there till the War of 1812--my granddad was killed in it--great place for raising horses, too, and we prospered. The family stayed in New Jersey mostly, though two of his sons moved south, to Richmond Virginia. When I was in the army, oh fifteen odd years ago-- it was just the Union Army then, not North or South. I joined the cavalry and stayed for five years, spent most of my time south, south and west, the Indian Wars if you could call them that. Spent part of the time in Texas, a year while it was still a republic helping them blow off their Indians, then a couple after she joined the Union in '45, we were stationed out of Austin. That's where I met my wife, Emilie--she also comes from Richmond-- her Pa was a colonel in Supplies. My that's pretty country, around Austin, but more so all around Richmond. Emilie... can I get you anything?"' "No, no thanks, Dmitri, the pain will pass. Go on, will you... talking, your talking helps me a lot."
"Sure, all right. My Emilie, Emilie Clemm was her name--she was a distant cousin of Poe's wife, Virginia Clemm, which I didn't find out till later but which's why I've a collection of his works." Dmitri had laughed. "Poe was a great writer but a bigger drunk and cocksman. Seems like all writers are bums, drunks and or fornicators--take Melville--maybe that's what makes them writers, me I can't write a letter without sweating. How about you?"' "Oh, I can write letters--have to, and keep a journal like most people. You were saying about this Poe?"' "I was going to tell you he married Virginia Clemm when she was thirteen--she was also his cousin, imagine that!--and they lived happily ever after but not very if what was reported in the newspapers and gossip was true--he was a randy son of a bitch though she didn't seem to mind. My Emilie wasn't thirteen but eighteen and a Southern belle if ever there was one. We were married when I got out of the army and joined Cooper-Tillman in Richmond--they wanted to expand into armaments and ammunition for export to Asia which I'd learned a lot about, that and shooting Indians and horse trading. Old Jeff Cooper figured that guns and other goods outward bound from Norfolk Virginia would go well with opium up the China coast, silver and tea inbound to Norfolk--but, you know Jeff. Cooper-Tillman and Struan's are old friends, eh?"' "Yes, and I hope it remains so. Go on."
"Nothing much more, or everything. Over the years, others in the family moved down south and spread out. My ma was from Alabama, I have two brothers and a sister, all younger than me. Now Billy's with the North, New Jersey 1st Cavalry, and my little brother's Janny--named after my granddaddy, Janov Syborodin, Janny's cavalry too but with the 3rd Virginian, Advance Scouts. It's all crap--those two know crap about war and fighting and they'll get themselves killed, sure as hell."
"You... are you going to go back?"' "Don't know, Malc. Every day I think yes, every night yes and every morning no, don't want to start killing family whatever side I'm on."
"Why did you leave and come to this godforsaken part of the world?"' "Emilie died. She got scarlet fever-- there was an epidemic and she was one of the unlucky ones. That was nine years ago--we were just about to have a kid."
"What rotten luck!"
"Yes. You and me, we've both had our share...."
Struan was so concentrated in his mystery book that he did not hear the outside door to her suite softly open and close, nor the lightness of her tiptoeing, nor notice her peer in for an instant, then disappear. In a moment there was an almost imperceptible click as her inner, bedroom door closed.
He looked up. Now listening intently. She had said that she would look in but if he was asleep she would not disturb him. Or if she was tired she would go straight to bed, quiet as a mouse, and see him in the morning. "Don't worry, darling," he had said happily. "Just have a good time, I'll see you at breakfast. Sleep well and know I love you."